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#Energy, Mobility & Sustainability

The changing world of the DSO in a smart energy system environment

  • November 8, 2016
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REPORT | The changing world of the DSO in a smart energy system environment

The changing landscape of the European energy system is fundamentally challenging the role of Distribution System Operators (DSOs). While drastic reforms are not warranted, national and European policy-makers should consider a number of legal and regulatory adjustments. This is the central finding of a new CERRE Energy & Climate study on the changing role of DSOs.

Key recommendations of the report include:

  • Adapting European legislation and national legal frameworks to assign DSOs the role of neutral market facilitator;
  • Allowing DSOs to conclude voluntary flexibility agreements with system users – either directly or through a third party;
  • Encouraging national regulatory authorities to design tariff structures according to local conditions, and not regulating such tariffs at the European level;
  • Revising European legislation to distinguish between core and non-core tasks, while allowing leeway for Member States to determine the exact scope of the latter category, in the light of actual levels of competition in their jurisdictions;
  • Removing legal obstacles that prevent DSO involvement in network reinforcement and congestion management;
  • Updating European and national legal frameworks to explicitly allow DSOs to be involved in local balancing and local congestion management tasks, making use of resources connected to their network.
  • Using European and national legal frameworks to provide the basic principles for neutral data management (e.g. non-discrimination, transparency, neutrality).
  • Allowing direct contracts between DSOs and consumers/prosumers, and only banning these when general consumer protection and data protection is considered inadequate.

CERRE Director General, Professor Bruno Liebhaberg, says:

“Technological developments, as well as changes on the supply and demand side of European electricity markets call into question the traditional role of DSOs. It is crucial that DSOs are equipped to provide appropriate responses.”

Author(s)
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Saskia Lavrijssen
Saskia Lavrijssen
Tilburg University

Professor Saskia Lavrijssen is Professor of Economic Regulation and Market Governance at Tilburg University. Sha was previously Professor of Consumer and Energy Law at the University of Amsterdam and Associate Professor of Public Economic Law at Utrecht University. Saskia’s work covers European law, competition law, energy law, economic regulation and public law, with a special focus on the regulation of the energy and water sectors. In 2010, she received an award by the Dutch Association for Competition Law for the best multi-disciplinary paper on public law an competition law , for the article ‘What role for National Competition Authorities in protecting non-competition interests after Lisbon?’, which was published in the prestigious European Law Review.

Professor Saskia Lavrijssen is Professor of Economic Regulation and Market Governance at Tilburg University. Sha was previously Professor of Consumer and Energy Law at the University of Amsterdam and Associate Professor of Public Economic Law at Utrecht University. Saskia’s work covers European law, competition law, energy law, economic regulation and public law, with a special focus on the regulation of the energy and water sectors. In 2010, she received an award by the Dutch Association for Competition Law for the best multi-disciplinary paper on public law an competition law , for the article ‘What role for National Competition Authorities in protecting non-competition interests after Lisbon?’, which was published in the prestigious European Law Review.

Anna Marhold
Anna Marhold
Leiden University
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Ana Trias
Researcher

Ana Trias specialises in funding, competition and regulation of network infrastructures. She holds a Bachelor of Laws from the Universidad de Montevideo (Uruguay) as well as a Master of European Studies and a Master of European Regulation of Network Industries (LL.M.) from the Center of European Integration Studies of the University of Bonn (Germany), where she is a Senior Fellow. Ana is a PhD researcher at the Tilburg Law and Economics Center of Tilburg University Graduate Law School (The Netherlands) and a Guest Lecturer of the Graduate Law School of the Universidad Catolica del Uruguay (Uruguay). She has received further academic training at the University of Montana (USA) and held senior positions in an international telecommunications group and a global consultancy firm before focusing on her academic work. She was also Vice Chair of the Competition Committee of the Brussels Industry Advisory Committee to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Ana Trias specialises in funding, competition and regulation of network infrastructures. She holds a Bachelor of Laws from the Universidad de Montevideo (Uruguay) as well as a Master of European Studies and a Master of European Regulation of Network Industries (LL.M.) from the Center of European Integration Studies of the University of Bonn (Germany), where she is a Senior Fellow. Ana is a PhD researcher at the Tilburg Law and Economics Center of Tilburg University Graduate Law School (The Netherlands) and a Guest Lecturer of the Graduate Law School of the Universidad Catolica del Uruguay (Uruguay). She has received further academic training at the University of Montana (USA) and held senior positions in an international telecommunications group and a global consultancy firm before focusing on her academic work. She was also Vice Chair of the Competition Committee of the Brussels Industry Advisory Committee to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

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